Authors: Antonio Centeno,Geoffrey Cubbage,Anthony Tan,Ted Slampyak
Tags: #Health; Fitness & Dieting, #Beauty; Grooming; & Style, #Men's Grooming & Style, #Style & Clothing, #Beauty & Fashion
Take every item in your default outfit that doesn't serve an irreplaceable safety function, and think about how you can kick it up one small notch.
In some cases this can be as simple as making sure you've got a good fit and clean fabric. Here are a few examples of small, easy upgrades that won't ruin an outfits functionality:
All of these upgrades will still function in a hands-on, physical work environment. They're a little more expensive to replace than plainer versions, but they're not any less useful.
When to Upgrade the Working Look
So when is it worth wearing slightly nicer clothes for manual labor?
Basically, when there's a concrete benefit in it for you. If it's just you and your work crew, hidden away somewhere, there's not much point. But you might consider going for a sharper style if anyone's going to be watching or evaluating you -- clients, bosses, potential customers, etc.
When you
shouldn't
bother is when it would actually impact your work, or make you look less prepared for it.
Because don't get us wrong -- you look better in clean, dark jeans and a polo than you do in overalls and a T-shirt. But if you're showing up to paint houses, and you know you're going to get covered in spills, wearing anything but your grubbiest and cheapest clothes makes you look wasteful and foolish.
So use some common sense. When you're mostly going to be walking, lifting things, measuring, testing, and doing other things that are hands-on but not dangerous or grubby, dress the look up a little. When there are environmental factors that could harm you or your clothing, forget about fashion and wear what works.
And when it comes time for a meeting, a project proposal, or something else that takes place in an office, rather than a job site, go ahead and throw a collared shirt and a sports jacket on. Can't hurt -- might help.
C
HAPTER 16:
D
RESSING
Y
OUR
A
GE
Should style change as a man ages?
In one sense, it doesn't matter if you think it "should" or not. A man's fashion is
going
to change, by virtue of his role in life and his budget, whether he wants it to or not.
Over a long enough lifespan, you'll also see fashion standards change fairly dramatically -- think about what twenty-somethings tend to wear today, versus what they wore fifty years ago. Plenty of men who were twenty in 1963 are still around, and they've seen a lot of change since then!
So to some extent you have no choice. But it's also worth a man's while to think about his age and how he can dress to flatter it specifically. Some looks just work better with a young face, or with gray hairs.
Men's Style - In Your Teens and 20s
The first adult years are generally not a time of custom clothing and high fashion, apart from a lucky few born into wealth.
Most men are going to spend their teens and 20s wearing whatever they can afford. That generally improves as the age range wears on -- guys in their late 20s typically have a lot more disposable income than guys in their early 20s, though there are obviously plenty of exceptions there.
A few things to keep in mind for dressing as a young man:
This is a time of transition, so make your changes as gradually as you need to -- but be focused on making them. Don't be complacent. Be adding to and improving your look now, so that you're not scrambling to dress your age a few years down the line.
Men's Style - In Your 30s
Traditionally, we think of men in their 30s as being men who are settling down into their places in life.
How true that is these days is sort of up for debate. The "traditional" model of manhood is hardly the only way of doing things. But no matter what you're doing with your life, your 30s is still not a bad time to be projecting an air of stability, or at least dependibility.
You're ready to stop being treated like a kid at this point. Your clothes should reflect that.
Don't be afraid to make some significant fashion changes as you hit your 30s and age through them:
The 30-something man's wardrobe isn't really that different from the 20-something man's -- just a little more focused, a little better fitted, and maybe a little less varied now that you know the looks that work for you.
Men's Style - In Your 40s
A man's 40s are when the "you're not a kid anymore" thing really needs to be taken seriously.
No matter how well you've aged, no one's going to mistake you for a wild young buck in your 40s, and you don't want to give the impression that you're trying.
Instead, your 40s are the years to start cultivating a more refined style. Dress yourself a little nicer, spend a little more on clothes, and work on building a collection that's going to last, if not the rest of your life, at least a good chunk of it.
Rather than radically changing your style from your earlier years, work on making improvements in quality throughout your 40s:
This is a good age to be upgrading, refining, and personalizing your style. Be classy -- you're not a kid anymore -- but have a little fun with it.
Men's Style - In Your 50s
Ah, the 50s. Not retirement age, for most of us, but certainly moving toward thinking-about-retirement age, at the very least.
This is actually an interesting age, from a fashion standpoint. You don't want to be dressing like a young man, but you also don't want to signal to people that you're past your prime. It can be a delicate balancing act.
If you have a key word for style in your 50s, it should be
elegance.
This is the age when you want to look refined, confident, and in charge, without pushing to achieve it.
Key things to look for in your wardrobe when you're past 50:
Depending on your career path, these may well end up being the most powerful and influential years of your life. It's worth dressing to reflect that.
Men's Style - In Your 60s and Up
Our society is not kind to old age.
Men in their 60s who don't take the time to dress sharp can easily find themselves dismissed from younger people's minds altogether. Once you've got gray (or no) hairs, wearing sloppy or battered clothing says "I'm done with life, you go on and don't pay any attention to me."
Cruel, but people are. So squash that train of thought before it gets started, and dress like someone who's active, confident, and important, whether you are or not.
Tips for guys in their 60s or older on the wardrobe front:
Keep it classy and dignified in your 60s. Your clothing should claim a respected status, not an easily-dismissed one.
The Limits of "Dressing Your Age"
No written rule is going to apply universally to all men of a certain age.